I once read a story about an ant who set his mind to move a mountain. An insect, a millimeter from jaw to legtip, laboring against a mass of stone and soil quadrillions of times his size. But he worked and worked and worked moving the bedrock one dram at a time, year after year, season after season, each trip melding into the next in an endless march of mindless labor, until where the mountain once stood, a peaceful valley sank down. All because of the labor of one very determined insect.
At the end of the fable, the writer tells us never to give up, for what we choose to work and persevere towards will surely happen if we truly try. As I read the story, I knew he was right. Never give up. Even if it takes a quadrillion trips, 1,000,000,000,000,000 trials, before the mountain bows to you. Even if your small, insectoid mind cracks like a candy-cane under a sandbag, even if you collapse and die after 6 decades of exhaustion, millions more left to go. Never give up. Even if your task is impossible, and it destroys your life, everything you love, everything that makes your little ant-soul tick. Never give up.